While his concern is very real, if Firefox removes trust for that CA it loses market share in China.And if that happens, then Firefox themselves have negated their own security benefits.I think it's prudent to keep an eye on CNNIC for this very issue, but until suspect behavior is detected, I think that any rash moves on the part of Mozilla could be worse than what's currently seen.

I couldn't help but notice the conspicuous instructions to "Uncheck TLS/SSL security" in each of the clients.I really hope that doesn't come back to bite anyone in the ass, there's enough spam on other parts of Facebook already.

Most sane datacenters will be extremely proactive about dealing with abuse complaints about spam, to say nothing about botnets, since they're the ones providing the IPs to the customers.Capitalism typically makes it hard on the baddies here: datacenters do NOT want to lose saleable IPs to long-lasting blocks.

It's not like it would have been hard for them to acknowledge that it's just "popular myth" or something, and keep all the rest of their little attention-drawing page as it is.People like idle little bits of trivia, even if they know there's no scientific basis."A+ people are pretty! Like me!" et cetera.

Careful viewers will notice that there is no engine installed in the Bel Air.I don't think the test is particularly enlightening, based on this fact. Sure, the engine block would still end up in the cabin, but its mass would have helped slow the crumpling of the hood.

We seriously need to find a middle ground for this issue. And by middle-ground, of course, I mean improving the keyboard and leaving controllers in the dust!Touch sensitivity is such a great feature that gaming keyboards should include it.